Current:Home > InvestThis Week in Clean Economy: ARPA-E’s Clean Energy Bets a Hard Sell with Congress, Investors -Ascend Wealth Education
This Week in Clean Economy: ARPA-E’s Clean Energy Bets a Hard Sell with Congress, Investors
View
Date:2025-04-15 12:35:44
In the labs of young startups and universities, researchers are fine-tuning groundbreaking fuel technologies and “out-innovating” other countries in the race to make clean energy.
That, at least, was the picture the Department of Energy wanted to convey at this week’s third annual ARPA-E Energy Innovation Summit. The event is an expo of high-risk energy inventions backed by DOE, held mainly for would-be investors.
This year it doubled as an appeal to Congress to save ARPA-E, DOE’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, which is running short on money.
At the Gaylord Convention Center near Washington, D.C., where the summit was held, Silicon Valley startup Envia Systems unveiled an electric car battery that costs half as much as lithium-ion cells and travels three times farther on a charge. California’s Makani Power test-flew a mockup of its airborne offshore wind turbine, which generates electricity at low wind speeds while tethered to land via cable. Michigan State University showed off its wave disc engine, an alternative to the internal-combustion engine that increases mileage to 100 mpg in gas-engine and hybrid cars, and produces 90 percent fewer emissions compared with today’s models.
All three projects received money from ARPA-E, once pitched as a “Marshall Plan” for energy. Since 2009 the fledgling agency has awarded more than $520 million in research grants to about 180 projects that promote American innovators in areas ranging from more efficient solar cells and air conditioners to grid storage for renewables.
The goal is to form a incubator for transformative technologies, so startups and labs can attract scale-up venture capital and private equity funding. DOE says 11 ARPA-E projects have lured a combined $200 million in private investment, five times what DOE put into them.
Yet the agency, which was created by the 2009 stimulus, is in a pickle. ARPA-E got a $400 million jumpstart in 2009—and it received a combined $455 million in the 2011 and 2012 budgets—but its funds are quickly drying up.
While Pres. Obama requested $350 million for ARPA-E in his 2013 budget proposal, it comes at a time when Congressional Republicans have promised to slash the amount of taxpayer dollars going into new energy technologies. Many soured on such programs after Solyndra, a solar startup backed by a $528 million DOE loan, went bankrupt. This week news broke that Abound Solar, a Colorado solar firm that won $400 million in DOE loan guarantees, was firing 280 people and abandoning plans for a second factory. Some analysts see signs of trouble for two other loan winners, Fisker Automotive and SoloPower.
At the summit, DOE brought in high-profile personalities to shore up support for ARPA-E, including Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, former Walmart CEO Lee Scott and Susan Hockfield, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. All argued that projects nurtured by ARPA-E—which is modeled after a Department of Defense program that helped create the Internet and GPS systems—could change the global energy landscape if given a significant amount of time and funding.
“It would be a terrible mistake” not to “invest even more money in ARPA-E,” said Bill Clinton during a keynote address Wednesday.
It’s a tricky sell. Even ARPA-E’s staunchest proponents admit that many of its projects could flop. Last month DOE said that nearly 35 projects, about 20 percent of the program, are struggling, the New York Times reported. Since September DOE has canceled six ARPA-E projects that won a combined $14.1 million. (The Treasury got $3.7 million of that back, a DOE spokesperson told Bloomberg.)
None of this surprises Bill Gates and his fellow ARPA-E supporters. “The failure rates are going to be well over 90 percent,” Gates told the summit on Tuesday. “This is a very complex set of technologies, so we need literally thousands of companies trying these technologies so we can get the 10 or 20 that [make it.]”
In reality, even if Congress funds ARPA-E, it’s private investment that matters most in the end. Investors can bankroll the factories that “moonshot” technologies need to deploy, and their appetite for these projects appears to be waning, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
That’s largely due to timing and to the nature of the projects. Many venture capitalists invested in clean energy inventions in 2008. That year half of all cleantech deals included at least one new investor, the Journal reported. Since then, they’ve learned firsthand of the enormous risk and time commitment involved in developing cutting-edge technologies to commercialization, and have opted to wait for returns on what they have, rather than seeking new projects. Last year only 30 percent of deals had new backers.
Mix of Good and Bad News Comes in New Global Ranking
The first-ever survey, from the World Wildlife Fund and Cleantech Group, a San Francisco market research firm, found that the U.S. government spends the most worldwide on R&D for clean energy technologies, and it has the greatest number of cleantech startups and investors.
But the news is less hopeful when it comes to three other indicators: renewable energy use, strong and steady policies for encouraging clean energy generation and the amount of revenue its cleantech firms generate. Relatively low marks in these categories, among others, landed the United States a fifth-place ranking in the index.
Denmark, meanwhile, topped the list. Israel came in second place, Sweden in third and Finland in fourth.
The rankings are based on an analysis of each country’s scores in 15 different categories. In addition to things like how much countries spend on R&D and how much renewable energy they generate, the report looked at whether their electric grids can support a large amount of green power, and if they have a streamlined application process for clean technology patents. It also examined the survival rate of fledgling startups, and the percentage of total workers that are employed in the cleantech sector.
The goal of the analysis is to show investors which countries are likely to thrive in the cleantech space over the next decade, while pointing out those that are lagging. It uses data between 2008 and 2011 from third parties and the Cleantech Group. The latest government spending figures were from 2009. In that year the Obama administration alloted more than $50 billion in federal stimulus for clean energy projects over four years.
But that could change. The country is planning to broaden its cleantech focus to include new technologies by pouring $18 billion in R&D funding over the next few years, according to a Lux Research report released on Tuesday, a move that could attract U.S. and European innovators to China.
The goal is to combine foreign expertise with Chinese spending. “This will create unforeseen opportunities for Western companies,” Lux Research said via news release.
veryGood! (219)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Claims that Jan. 6 rioters are ‘political prisoners’ endure. Judges want to set the record straight
- Lionel Messi effect: Inter Miami sells out Hong Kong Stadium for Saturday practice
- Detroit man dies days after being mauled by three dogs, wife says
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Who Is Kelly Osbourne's Masked Date at the 2024 Grammys? Why This Scary Look Actually Makes Perfect Sense
- FOX debuts Caitlin Clark cam during Iowa's women's basketball game against Maryland
- How Donald Trump went from a diminished ex-president to the GOP’s dominant front-runner
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Are you happy? New film follows a Bhutan bureaucrat who asks 148 questions to find out
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 'Curb your Enthusiasm' Season 12: Cast, release date, how to watch the final episodes
- Judge rejects a claim that New York’s marijuana licensing cheats out-of-state applicants
- List of top Grammy Award winners so far
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Michigan woman holiday wish turned into reality after winning $500,000 from lottery game
- Clearwater plane crash: 3 victims killed identified, NTSB continues to investigate cause
- Unfortunate. That describes Joel Embiid injury, games played rule, and NBA awards mess
Recommendation
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Don Murray, Oscar nominee who once played opposite Marilyn Monroe, dies at 94: Reports
Chicagoland mansion formerly owned by R. Kelly, Rudolph Isley, up for sale. See inside
Detroit man dies days after being mauled by three dogs, wife says
Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
About 1,000 manatees piled together in a Florida park, setting a breathtaking record
What's going on at the border? A dramatic standoff between Texas and the White House.
The destruction of a Jackie Robinson statue was awful. What happened next was amazing.